139 Ill. 368 | Ill. | 1891
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This was a bill in chancery, by plaintiffs in error, against defendants in error, to the November term, 1888, of the circuit court of Pike county. The bill alleged, that about May 31, 1883, Elijah Jeffers died testate, seized of certain real estate and possessed of a large amount of personal property, leaving him surviving, a widow, the complainants, his only children, and the defendants, his grandchildren, being the children and heirs-at-law of a deceased son, Francis L. Jeffers; that by his last will said Elijah disposed of his property by the following clause:
“Second—I give and bequeath to my wife all my property, both real and personal, during her life. After her decease that each of my children shall share equally in all that remains of my property, both real and personal.”
The bill then proceeds to allege “that on the — day of June, 1888, the said widow departed this life, upon the happening of which event the heirs became and now are entitled to a partition of the real estate owned by said testator, and to an equal division of the personal estate remaining after the death of said widow; that by said last will and testament no power or authority is given to the executor, or any one else, to sell or make • partition of said estate, and the same is so situate than no equal division thereof can be made without the aid of this court, and from the fact that a part of those interested therein are under age; that the children of the said Elijah Jeffers are your orators, as hereinbefore named, (except Hiram Hooper, Thomas Patten and David P. Daniels, who claim only marital rights through their respective wives, as herein set forth,) and the heirs of Francis T. Jeffers, deceased, who was a son of the said Elijah Jeffers, but who is now deceased, having died in the lifetime of his. father. The said Francis left surviving him, and now in life, the following children and heirs-at-law, viz., Clara Nettie, Effie Lucinda, Lillie Gilbert and Mertie Leonidas, and his widow, Ann Jeffers. * * * That there are no personal effects belonging to said estate except the notes and accounts due said testator in his lifetime for money loaned to his several children above named, and your orators aver that it is right and just that the amount of money due, severally, on said notes and accounts should be taken into account and consideration, and charged to said heirs, severally, in the settlement and distribution of said estate.” Then follows a description of the real estate of which the testator died seized. The prayer is for process against the defendants, the appointment of a guardian ad litem for them, and that upon a hearing an account be taken of the interest of the parties and a finding as to the respective shares of the owners of said lands, that commissioners be appointed, etc., concluding with the usual prayer in bills for partition. The will of Elijah Jeffers was attached to and made part of the bill. The answer of the defendants, by their guardian ad litem, specifically denies that any charge should be made against their share of the estate of Elijah Jeffers on account of any indebtedness of their deceased father.
At said November term the master in chancery, in pursuance of an order of the court, made his report of evidence taken by him, and also his conclusions thereon, finding each of the complainants entitled to one-tenth and each of the defendants to one-fortieth of said real estate. This report was approved, and commissioners duly appointed to make partition accordingly. Subsequently these commissioners reported the premises not susceptible of division, and thereupon a decree of sale was entered, in obedience to which the master sold the premises, and his report thereof was duly approved. At the next term of said circuit court the cause was re-referred to the master, with directions to take and report the evidence, with his conclusions as to whether advancements had been made by Elijah Jeffers, in his lifetime, to the father of defendants, and whether said father was indebted to the testator, and whether, in the distribution of the funds in the master’s hands, said defendants should be charged with any such indebtedness. In his report on this reference the master found that said Francis L. Jeffers, father of the defendants, at the time of his death'was indebted to said Elijah Jeffers in the sum of $611.40, as shown by certain promissory notes. These notes do not appear in the record, and there is nothing to show when they were given or when they became due. The master reported his conclusion, from the evidence taken on this branch of the case, that such indebtedness should not be charged to the defendants. He also found, and so reported, that the complainant Isaac E. Jeffers was indebted to the said estate $1645.97; the complainant Lizzie Donley, $476.25 ; the complainant Mary A. Hooper, $342.10; D. P. Daniels, husband of the complainant Lucinda Daniels, $364.47; the complainant S. P. Jeffers, $365.41; the complainant James Jeffers, $591.63; the complainant J. C. Jeffers, $458.78; the complainant William P. Jeffers, $1001.37. He then treated the amounts due from Lizzie Donley, Mary A. Hooper, D. P. Daniels, S. P. Jeffers and J. C. Jeffers as collected, and added the amounts thereof to the proceeds of the sale of the real estate,—$1500.65,—making for distribution, $3558.66. This amount he divided equally among said last named complainants, and the complainant Rachel Patten, who owed nothing, and the defendants, giving each $508.40, and leaving the amounts due from Isaac, James and William P. Jeffers undisposed of. No exception was taken to this report so far as it affects the complainants, but exceptions were filed to it in so far as it held the defendants not liable for the amount reported as due said estate from their father. The final order of the court overruled said exceptions, and confirmed the master’s report, making a final order of distribution in conformity therewith.
Complainants prosecute this writ of error, and insist, first, that under the will of Elijah Jeffers, the defendants, his grandchildren, can take no part of his estate; and second, if they ■can, the indebtedness of their father to said estate should be charged against them in making distribution of the assets of said estate.
The assertion of the first of these propositions by plaintiffs in error is flying in the face of their own bill. The argument is, that the father of defendants having died before the testator made his will, the language, 81 to each of my children,” did not include the deceased son, and hence his heirs could take nothing by the will. The bill throughout recognizes the right of the defendants to share in the estate of their grandfather, the testator. No one could mistake it as being other than a bill for the partition of the estate of Elijah Jeffers, deceased, in which the nine complainants each claim an undivided one-tenth of said estate, conceding the remaining tenth to belong to the defendants. All parties and the court so treated it, and it was not until after the filing of the master’s report ■finding the interest of the .defendants not chargeable with their father’s indebtedness, that an attempt was made to question their right to that interest. The master’s report so found the respective rights of the parties, and it was approved by the court. A decree of partition was rendered accordingly. All the steps in the cause to the master’s report finding defendant’s interest not chargeable with said indebtedness were taken upon the motion of complainants themselves, and upon the theory that defendants were owners of a one-tenth interest in the real and personal property of the deceased which remained at the death of his widow. Even after the filing of that report no attempt was made to amend the bill so as to present a different issue, but the effort was to deny that interest by exception to a master’s report not purporting in any way to decide that issue. Complainants, by their own bill and proceedings under it, have established the rights of defendants which they now attempt to defeat. This, clearly, they can mot do.
We are also of the opinion that the finding and decree of the court below, that defendants’ interest in said estate was not chargeable with their father’s indebtedness, must be affirmed.. The contrary view could only be maintained on the theory that the executor of Elijah Jeffers had the right to set off any debt due said estate from Francis L. against the legacy to the latter. It is undoubtedly true that where a legacy or bequest is left to the testator’s debtor, the indebtedness may be taken out of the legacy, for the reason, as is said, “the legatee’s demand is in respect of the testator’s assets, without which the executor is not liable, and therefore the legatee in such case is considered by a court of equity to have so much of the assets already in his hands as the debt amounts to, and consequently to be satisfied pro tanto.” (Toll, on Executors, 338.) It has also-been held that an executor’s right to deduct a debt due the testator from a legacy will not be defeated by showing the debt to be barred by the Statute of Limitations.
But neither the allegations nor the proof in this case would justify the- application of the foregoing rules to these defendants. In the first place, the bill is not by the executor of the last will of Elijah Jeffers, in that capacity. The object of it is-not to collect debts due the testator, but merely to have them taken into the account in making distribution of the estate. No indebtedness from Francis L. is mentioned in the bill, much less to offset such indebtedness against a legacy due the defendants. It must be borne in mind that these defendants, being minors, could waive nothing, and their rights could only be taken away from them by proper allegation and strict proof. If complainants chose to have portions or all of their respective indebtedness added to the proceeds of the sale of the real estate, and distribution made thereof as so much money due the estate collected, as they seem to have done, they had an undoubted right to do so as among themselves, but they can not compel the defendants to pay their father’s debt in that way. The master’s report shows a large amount. of money still due the estate from certain of the complainants, and it is clear that until that indebtedness is collected by the executor, or he in some way shows that it can not be collected, he would be in no condition to compel these defendants, even by a proper bill, to submit to a deduction of their father’s indebtedness from the legacy due them, because until the executor has collected all the assets of the estate, it can not be known what the amount of the legacy to the defendants is. This was certainly an unusual proceeding on the part of the complainants, and the decree of the circuit court doubtless leaves the-estate of Elijah Jeffers in an awkward condition, but we see-no reversible error in the record, under the errors assigned,, which the plaintiffs in error are in a position to urge.
The decree of the circuit court must be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.